Information om | Engelska ordet AIRSTAFF
AIRSTAFF
Antal bokstäver
8
Är palindrom
Nej
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Exempel på hur man kan använda AIRSTAFF i en mening
- WCOL was still successful in this format until a series of management and airstaff changeovers followed in the early 1980s, including a brief switch to middle of the road-styled adult standards and the brief return of Columbus broadcast legend Spook Beckman.
- The initial lineup of airstaff included Barb Abney, Brian "BT" Turner, Jason Nagel, and the duo of Thorn and Linnea Mohn.
- Shortly after Three Point became the licensee in September 2004, it agreed to sell KBTB to Flying Bear Media, a company run by former Infinity Broadcasting sales manager Joe Bayliss and backed by Alta Communications and Tailwind Capital, and fired the entire airstaff.
- He promptly dropped the playlets entirely, expanded the playlist, and hired an airstaff of live jocks who started on September 19, 1988.
- The original KALC airstaff in 1994 included Frosty Stillwell, Jamie White and Frank Kramer in mornings, Chris Davis in middays, and Alan Kabel in afternoons, along with Music Director Jim Lawson, Creative Production Director Kelly Michaels, and Program Director Gregg Cassidy.
- From the late 1990s until 2008, WNWV's airstaff consisted of: Tom Murphy in morning drive; Mark Ribbins in middays; Richard Greer in afternoons; Joan Kelly, Desiray McCray, and eventually Michelle Chase in evenings; Starr D'Avril in overnights; news/traffic reporter Mike Kessler (later known as Mike Gallagher); and weekend hosts Harvey Zay, Mark Sanders, Grace Roberts, Lisa Jeffries, Carmen Kennedy, Frank Macek, Carolyn Carr and Nathan Pope; and syndicated shows hosted by Dave Koz, Ramsey Lewis and Chris Dechant.
- Following its purchase by Paxson Communications in April 1996, WSHE dismissed all airstaff, dropped the rock format after 24 years, and began a 36-hour stunt loop of playing "Changes" by David Bowie, "Change" by Candlebox, and "It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)" by R.
- While most of the previous format's airstaff (including Toronto market veterans Gord James, John Novak and Bob Saint) were let go, Darrin Laidman and Colleen Rusholme remain in mornings with their producer Mike moving to evenings after a brief jockless period.
- As the country gradually returns to normalcy, the station began reinstating its now-reduced airstaff, and allows livestreaming overnight; as of 2024, overnight radio broadcasts remain off-the-air.
- With the change, morning host Dave Blezard moved to afternoons at CHAY, while CIQB's new airstaff was announced on August 2.
- The station's airstaff included Kansas City-native Mancow Muller (syndicated from Chicago) in morning drive, Jason Justice, "The Morning (and later on, Afternoon) Headrush" w/ Jay and Sammye, and Roach and Sumo (with The Fonz) hosting "The Midnight Moshpit", as well as carrying "Off the Beaten Track" featuring a freeform format on Friday (and later, Sunday) nights, "Resurrection Sunday" and the syndicated "Out of Order Countdown" with Jed the Fish on weekends.
- Local airstaff for WLXC in its first year included station general manager/part-owner Jim Forrest and Tom Hayes for mornings, Gary Pozik for mid-mornings (with a health and fitness show, which was dropped months later), Ken Wall for early afternoons, Matt Hogue's "Sports Mattinee" from 4-6 PM and Phil Kornblut and "South Carolina SportsTalk" for evenings (which was moved after several months of being pre-empted by games to All-News outlet WVOC II).
- Initially, the airstaff consisted of Mark Evans and Dick Warner ("The Breakfast Flakes") in mornings, Gregory "Greg Koogler" MacArthur in middays, Bruce "Doc Winston" Soderholm in afternoons, Craig "Jay Taylor" Wendel in evenings, and "Brooklyn Dave" holding down overnights.
- In the hopes of attracting listeners, KKRD would tweak its programming and shake up its airstaff; longtime morning show host Don Hall, who had been teamed with Patti Masten since 1996, would move to sister station KZSN in January 2003, and would be replaced by Brad Streeter and Kracker (with Masten remaining as a co-host), followed by Sid, Emily, and Kracker.
- The branding is a nod to Delaware's poultry industry, and the station's airstaff use chicken-themed pseudonyms on-air, such as "The Rooster" and "Chickie" (in a similar manner to Froggy, a country music brand used extensively by Forever Media's other country stations).
- KCVR-FM would use KNTY's airstaff during this time to voicetrack in key dayparts, while still airing local advertisements and weather reports.
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